If your files are that important, then you should make a complete backup before you change anything. After you have a backup, you can learn how to use the command line without worrying about mistakes. For that matter, copy a subset of your old files to a new directory, and try some of the commands.

Brian


On Apr 10, 2007, at 12:10, Tim wrote:

I found this:

>I would add -V and log all output to a file.  also, someone has
>reported that if the input FLAC file has errors and you use --force,
>the transcoded file will only have data up to the error, and I still
>have to look into this.  so safer still would be>>
>
>... -exec sh -c 'flac -t {} && flac -8V {}' \; ...
>
>Josh
>

I wish I could say that I understand this.
Any chance someone could provide a bit more basic instructions?
I know, what a PITA n00b!
Sorry, but I've rarely worked with command line syntax and I don't want to hose up my carefully ripped files.
Anyone?
Thanks

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